New data, released today for the first time, reveals the truth about every secondary school’s performance.

The publication of the results of more than 3,300 secondary schools’ GCSE and A level exams is part of the Government’s drive for greater transparency - giving parents more information than ever before about how their child’s school is performing. The Department for Education is this year publishing 400 per cent more data about secondary schools than in 2010.

how many pupils at each school are entered into the core academic subjects that make up the EBacc.

The 2011 GCSE results reveal that hundreds of secondary schools are failing to help pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds achieve their full potential. Disadvantaged children - those on free school meals or in local authority care for at least six months - are approximately half as likely to achieve the national benchmark of five A*-C grade GCSEs including English and maths compared to their peers.

The figures also highlight those schools that are successfully achieving great outcomes for deprived children, setting a gold standard for other schools to follow.

The results show that:

only 33.9 per cent of disadvantaged pupils achieved five A*-C grade GCSEs including English and maths, compared to the national average of 58.2 per cent in maintained schools

in 339 schools, with more than 10 disadvantaged pupils, fewer than 20 per cent of those pupils achieved five A*-C grade GCSEs including English and maths

in contrast 21 schools, with more than 10 disadvantaged pupils, saw more than 80 per cent of those pupils gaining five A*-C grade GCSEs including English and maths.

The picture is similar with the core academic subjects that make up the EBacc. Nationally, only one in 25 disadvantaged pupils managed to secure good grades in a combination of English, maths, a language, history or geography, and two sciences. This compares to the national average of nearly one in six.

Schools Minister Nick Gibb said:

We should have high expectations for all children regardless of their circumstances. Today’s figures reveal a shocking waste of talent in many schools across the country. All too often, pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds aren’t given the same opportunities as their peers.

But there are great examples of schools achieving the best for their disadvantaged pupils. If they can get it right, then so can all schools.

Thanks to the introduction of the EBacc, we are opening up opportunities for all pupils to study the core academic subjects that employers and universities demand. And with the Pupil Premium we are specifically targeting funding at disadvantaged pupils, so that schools have the resources they need to make a difference.

For the first time, the Tables highlight how pupils have progressed since they left primary school.

The figures show the hard work by many secondary schools in turning around pupils who were below the expected standard at the end of Key Stage 2. 6.5 per cent of pupils who had been below Level 4 at the end of primary school, went on to achieve five A*-C grade GCSEs including English and maths.

However, this year’s GCSE statistics also show that thousands of previously high achieving pupils are being failed by their secondary school:

8,600 pupils, 4.9 per cent, who were excelling at the end of primary school, then failed to gain to five A*-C grades including English and maths.

45.6 per cent of pupils, some 120,000, who were at Level 4 at Key Stage 2 failed to make the expected amount of progress, to five A*-C grades including English and maths, at secondary school.

Nick Gibb added:

Children only have one chance at education. These tables show which schools are letting children down. We will not hesitate to tackle underperformance in any school, including academies. Heads should be striving to make improvements year on year, and we will not let schools coast with mediocre performance.

We are driving up standards right across the board. We are bringing the best graduates into teaching, developing a world-class curriculum, and restoring order to our classrooms.

We have introduced a tough new inspection regime targeted at the weakest performing schools and Ministers now have clear new powers to intervene when schools are failing.

The GCSE and A Level results for 2011 also show that:

for the 166 academies with results in both 2010 and 2011, the percentage of pupils achieving five or more good GCSEs including English and maths rose from 40.6 per cent to 46.3 per cent, an increase of 5.7 percentage points. This means academies’ GCSE results improved by nearly twice the level seen across all maintained schools

there are 107 secondary schools below the floor standard. 132 schools rose above the floor from 2010 to 2011, with 48 schools dropping below the floor

only 23.7 per cent of all pupils were entered for a combination of subjects that could lead to the EBacc - last year it was 22.0 per cent

just 17.6 per cent of all pupils achieved the EBacc - last year it was 15.6 per cent

the overall number of five GCSE (or iGCSE or equivalent) passes at A* to C including English and mathematics for all pupils has increased this year by 5.4 percentage points to 58.9 per cent - in state-funded schools there was a 3.1 percentage point rise to 58.2 per cent.

Notes to editors

Raising the attainment for disadvantaged children is an absolute priority for the Government. For the first time, this year’s tables include information on the performance of deprived pupils - defined as those either eligible for free school meals or who have been looked after continuously by the local authority for six months.

Low attainers are those who did not reach Level 4 at Key Stage 2. Medium attainers are those who reached Level 4. High attainers are those who exceeded Level 4.

A secondary school is below the floor standard if:

fewer than 35 per cent of pupils achieve the basics standard of five A* to C grade GCSEs inc English and maths and

fewer pupils make good progress in English between KS2 and KS4 than the national average and

fewer pupils make good progress in maths between KS2 and KS4 than the national average.
The 35 per cent floor will increase. In 2012, it will rise to 40 per cent and by 2015 it will rise to 50 per cent.
The local authorities with the highest percentage of schools below the floor are: